,WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17; 1968 T onight: Project KETCH will be the subject for a public forum to be held at 8 tonight in Schwab. John Toman,, of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, Project Plowshare, will be the featured speaker. His subject will be: "KETCH and Related Experi ence." His talk will be followed by a brief presentation by Nunzio J Palladino, dean of the Col lege of Engineering and profes soi of nuclear engineering, speaking on “The Role of the Commonwealth in Project KETCH." A panel of experts, following the two formal presentations, will answer questions from the audience. Moderator for the program will be Warren F. Witzig, pro fessor and head of the Depart ment of Nuclear Engineering. The meeting will be spon sored by the student chapters of the American Nuclear So ciety, American Society of Civil Engineers, and American So ciety for Mechanical Engi neers, as well as the Commit tee for Earth Science Seminars at the University. Hazen on Mining Scott W. Hazen, chief of the mine systems engineering group, U.S. Bureau of Mines in Denver, Colo., will be a guest of the Department of Mineral Economics this week. ' He is the first of four guest speakers to be sponsored by the department during the Election Summary PRESIDENT WEST HALLS CONGRESSMAN James Womer (Independent) Barry Todd (Student-Lion Party) Jon Fox (Student-Lion Parly) Garry Wamser (New Party) VICE PRESIDENT Jay Hertzog (Independent) Theodore Thompson (Student-Lion Party) Stephen Gerson (New Party) NORTH HALLS CONGRESSMAN TREASURER Susan Poliiylo (Student-Lion Party) Harvey Reeder (Student-Lion Party) Elena Ciletti (New Party) Don Paule (New Party) SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT SOUTH HILLS CONGRESSMAN Cathy Willigerod (Student-Lion Party) Colette Straub (Student-Lion Party) Robert Emery (New Party) Susan O'Hare (New Party) TTINTOB fl PHP«!inP)IT Larry Wallace (Student-Lion Party) POLLOCK-NJTTANY CONGRESSMAN Theodore lizkowilz (New Party) . (2) SOPHOMORE CLASS PRESIDENT L ®? n ” Dawes (Student-Lion Parly) Michael Kleeman (Student-Lion Party) M>mx Hechi (Student-Lion Party) Scott Miller (New Party) Bonrae Slmlh ' New Pa *‘y> EAST HALLS CONGRESSMAN Paula Dubestor (Student-Lion Party) FRATERNITY CONGRESSMAN Jill Green (New Parly) Murray Schechter (Student-Lion Parly) Ronald Yasbin (Independent) James Sandman (New Party) ATTENTION! -Former Key Club Members -Former Circle K Members from Commonwealth Campuses THE PENN STATE CIRCLE K CLUB Men's Service Organization Serving Campus Kiwanis Sponsored and Internationally Community T||ligjp Organized IS NOW ACCEPTING NEW MEMBERS For Information Contact KARL KNICHT BRUCE BALMAT 238-0938 865-4293 Spring Term. Hazen will present the Earth and Mineral Sciences collo quium at 4 p.m. today in 26 Mineral Sciences on “Some As pects of Probability Models in Mineral Deposit Sampling ” He will speak also at 8 a.m. Friday in 62 Willard on "Spatial Distribution of Ore Deposits.” * » * The first meeting of the Town Women will be held tonight at 7:30 in 265 Willard. Its purpose will be to make an effort to im prove women’s off-campus liv ing conditions. The Town Women feel that by forming their own organiza tion they will achieve represen tation in a student organization and resolve their problems. Negro Protest 7 ivement Daniel Walden will address an open meeting at 7:30 tonight in 71 Willard sponsored by the Young Democrats on “The Ne gro Protest Movement—from Du Bois to King, and Beyond.” Walden, an associate profes sor of history at the Univer sity’s Capitol Campus, is pres ently teaching the first Negro history course to be offered here. Walden has expressed par ticular interest in encouraging all interested underclassmen who could not enroll in his course to attend this public lec ture, in which he will attempt to ground the problem of the political transfer of power in Town Women, Radio Club Meet, Too Project KETCH, Negro History its historical context. Walden will outline the strug gle of the black man in Amer ica to become a free and pro ductive citizen and focus on those forces that have betrayed the century-old promise of emancipation. * * * Radio Club Meets The Amateur Radio Clio will hold a general meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in 301 Boucke. Guest speaker at the meet ing will be Robert Gawryla, who will speak on “Station Ap pointments and the National Traffic System”. * # * Alard Quartet The musical works of Irving Fine, Mozart, and Alberto Ginastera will be featured at 8:30 tonight in a concert by the Alard String Quartet. The program will be held in the Recitai Hall of the Music Building. The Ginastera composition, written in 1958, was featured in a recent appearance by the Quartet at Messiah College near Harrisburg for the Latin American Festival there. The last few weeks have also found the group performing in Maryland and North Carolina. * * * Mental Measurement Oscar Krisen Buros, inter national authority in the field of measurements in educa tion, is the sneaker for the third of the Graduate School Lecture Series to be presented THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA at 8 p.m. tomorrow in 101, Chambers. His subject will be: “Exper iences as Editor of the Mental OSCAR K. BUROS Mental Measurement Measurement Yearbooks.” Formerly an elementary school principal and supervi sor of elementary education in Milburn, N.J., Buros has also taught at Teachers Col lege, Columbia University. Lat er he became professor of education and director of the Institute of Mental Measure- Name of Fox Missed in Box The name of Jon Fox, Stu dent-Lion Party candidate for president of the Undergrad uate Student Government, was inadvertently left off yester day’s USG Elections Summary. i | | NICKELODEON NITES | I This Term f X ■ 4*' X t | April 19 May 10 May 24 June 7 l\ I I T | tickets for this week’s show £ 1 at HUB Desk ! T " A i ’ \ t University Union Board | $ ' | April 26-28, 1968 Clagett Conference Center Buckeystown, Md. Cost is S 7.QO Transportation is provided Call by April 18th "In initialing "The Shelter" we propose that some forty students from various backgrounds be brought together for an experiment in community living. These students would be reponsible for the maintenance and social-educational programming of the house. A room with bath on the main floor of the house will be reserved as a guest room for visitors who will contribute, from their current thought or action, to the intellectual life and social leadership of the house. The theme of our inquiry will be "the crisis of social and political revolu tion." All available resources of society concerned for human issues will be integrated into the explor ation of our current crisis. The house will explore what the common life and thought together can offer in attempting to provide intimations of new directions toward social change as well as how the members themselves can personally participate in the process. By joining "The Shelter" one commits himself to an identity. He commits himself to a positive stance in the midst of the maelstrom. He becomes a member of a community of peers dedi cated to the intellectual analysis of the current hang-ups and to service on task forces that might be formed to fulfill the needs and aims of the house. He will learn to respect himself and others for their basic humanity. Although our task is great, the opportunities for service and personal growth are boundless. 'Where there is no vision the people perish'." Applications are at the HUB desk. For information cal!; 238-5655, 238-0786 ments at Rutgers University, cussion in the academic com- As a major in the Signal Corps munity on the critical issues during World War 11, he was which face America today, in charge of the testing pro- These issues include- the gram jn the ASTP. Vietnam war and its subse- In 1956-57, Buros was a Ful bright lecturer in Uganda. Since that time, particularly following an early retirement, he and his wife have traveled extensively. They have visited many countries in Africa, and Buros has served as consult ant on education programs in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda. With a brother, Buros and his wife established the Buros Foundation, which provides Af rican schools with needed text books * * # Architect To Lecture Paolo Soleri, artist and archi tect who studied under Frank Lloyd Wright, will be at the University this week for two public lectures and a series of class discussions and seminars. Sponsored by the Department of Art and Department of Architecture, the lectures are both scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in 162 Willard. One will be given tonight and another on Friday. - • Topics of Soleri’s illustrated presentations- will be “En vronment and the Artist” and “Environment and the Archi tect.” There will be a meeting of the Coalition for a Day of Dia logue on Peace at 9 tonight in 265 Willard. This group is now in the process of forming for the purpose of stimulating dis VOTE MURRAY' SCHECHTER For Fraternity Congressman ACTION FOR CHRISTIANS TODAY A CONFERENCE ON PRAGMATIC CHRISTIA Episcopal—Lutheran-—Methodist FRANCENA L. MILLER AAUW Director quent effects on “Great So ciety” programs, racism and the draft. The International Student Strike, set ,for April 26, will also be discussed. Nuclear Engines > jug The second of the Spring Term Nuclear Engineering Col loquium presentations .will be held tomorrow at 1 p.m. in 117 Sackett. The speaker will be Frank B. Hill from the nuclear CAREERS IN FOOD SERVICE SERVICE SYSTEMS CORP. j A ■ ! m SUBSIDIARY OF DEL MONTE CORP. One of the nation's most rapidly expanding con tract Food Service Management companies will be conducting interviews on Thursday, April 30, 1968. Opportunities are available for ambitious young men and women throughout the North Eastern United States. Contact your placement office for details. ACT! , •. k . *. -• s ,*!. .>*!•<'/:' \*a ,* ft*V - > * * , * !>•/»>< l ."'V < »{ t »Va * r ' Pro?i "' « - iv ' +>\ engineering depar tmen t of Mrs. Perry R. Smith, of Brookhaven National Labora- State College, is general chahr tory. His topic will be: “Ap- man for the convention for plied Radiation Research at which the local branch is host; Brookhaven National The program will open with tory.” an informal reception at 8:30 Hill will summarize the p.m. tomorrow at the Nittany status of their radiation pro- Lion Inn to which all local cessing research including the AAUW members are invited.' study of radiation-induced Academic coordinator is Mrs. chemical reactions, food pas- Franklin Cook representing the teurization and sterilization ap. College of Human. Develop plications. He will also discuss ment, which is campus spon» irradiation sources and instru-, sor of the events, mentation. ■ - Chemistry Lecture George A. Olah, chairman of the Department of Chemistry at Case-Western Reserve Uni versity, will discuss “New Vistas of lon Organic Reactions in the Superacidity Range,” in. the Chemistry Colloquium lec ture series, at 12:45 p.m. to morrow in 310 Whitmore Lab oratory. AAUW Banquet Francena L. Miller, general director of the American As sociation of University Women and AAUW Educational Foun dation since 1967, will give the banquet address at the annual convention of the Pennsylva nia Division, AAUW. The banquet, scheduled for 7:15 p.m. Friday at the Nit tany Lion Inn, will be follow ed by a reception honoring Miller. In her conference address, titled “Your AAUW,” Miller will stress the importance, of the work of AAUW as a force in shaping community, state and national policies. Discussion on: The Church and -Black Power 'Student Power -Seach for Morality -Theological Perspective Contact: Kelvie Cureton tv".' ■ ' ' .'“"M *''** ■■. ! f ... ■> r • ’>f;" ... ■; o*? ■ * * * * * * IMIIY 865-8255 PAGE FIVE Still the same shaggy, snarling nemesis, these but ton-wearers will tell you. And as ready as ever to blow down an unguarded door Guard yours. Begin today to think positively about your - financial future. Remember— a good life insurance policy provides one of the sturdiest foundations for anyone's fi- : nancial planning. And Provi dent Mutual’s trained profes sionals can design programs specifically for college men; and women. A variety of plans . . , guaranteed sav ings and protection features." Stop by today. Or give us a call. B. B. Wolf lives. Big, bad, and unpleasant as ever. Ah that’s changed is the style of sheep’s clothing. Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers